The Desalination Decision

I have created this blog to serve as an unbiased guide to the decision to reactivate the Charles Meyer Desalination Plant in Santa Barbara. I found that there is a lot of information floating around on the internet about this desalination facility, but most of it lacks the important facts that the public should know. I want to provide a clear blog that only posts the most crucial information about the facility. Though I do use some internet websites, my primary source for this blog is the City of Santa Barbara and the reports and studies that they release. I hope that this blog will give you all the information you need to fully understand the desalination decision.

Friday, May 30, 2014

Desalination: Pro/Con

The disadvantages and advantages of desalination are constantly debated. I have listed the most important pros and cons for desalination below.

Disadvantages: 
  • As I mentioned in my last post, desalination is an expensive process. The Charles Meyer desalination plant will cost the district a large amount of money to reactivate and operate the facility. For exact costs, take a look at my last blog post. 
  • Desalination is a high energy process. The average desalination plant uses about 2 kilowatt hours of electricity to produce a cubic meter of drinking water. To generate this energy, fossil fuels are often used. This is clearly harmful to the environment and is adding to the climate change problem. Some desalination plants harness solar energy, but I doubt that the district will spend further money to install solar power into the Charles Meyer desalination plant. 
  • The waste of the desalination plant, which is often called brine, is loaded with salt and chemicals used in treatment such as chlorine. When this waste is dumped back into the ocean, environmental problems can arise. The brine poisons some animals and can create entire dead zones in the ocean.
At the beginning of this blog, I said that I wanted to create an unbiased guide to the desalination decision. I just listed some very strong disadvantages for desalination. Don't get discouraged! Desalination may not have many advantages, but they are strong positives. 

Advantages: 
  • Simply put, Santa Barbara needs the water. The ocean is extremely vast and provides a drought proof source of water. Reverse Osmosis treatment provides a clean high quality water. The desalination provides a stable source of clean water. Santa Barbara needs this. 
  • Desalination gives other freshwater sources a reprieve. For example, It helps prevent groundwater over-drafting, simply by having a new source of water. 
My Opinion: 
You may not want my opinion on desalination, but I am going to tell you it just once. After this post, I will only state the facts and I will attempt to remove my bias from all other posts. I do not really approve of desalination. I think that a lot of times it hurts the environment more than it helps the community. It should not be a primary source of water for many districts. For example, placing a desalination plant in Seattle, Washington would be disastrous. However, there are many cases in which desalination is imperative. Freshwater is not as accessible to many people. While Seattle is abundant in water, other locations are not. It would be absurd to shame the United Arab Emirates for their use of desalination because they lack access to freshwater from other sources. I understand the use of desalination in the UAE and I understand the need for desalination in Santa Barbara. Sure, it is expensive, not necessarily environmentally friendly and it requires a large amount of energy, but Santa Barbara needs a stable source of high quality water and desalination is the solution. 

7 comments:

  1. This was a very fascinating post. It is interesting how so many of life's necessities often require some destruction of the environment. It is a shame you don't think the plant will run on solar power. That would be a better choice for the city.

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  2. Very interesting, as a resident of Santa Barbara, I've been hearing a lot about this in the news. It's true what you say: Santa Barbara really does need water! I don't think people are understanding enough about the pros and cons but this has really cleared up a lot of confusion.

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  3. Interesting enough I think that residents of Southern California by less for water than do Seattle residents. Is Santa Barbara really doing enough to limit water usage. Conservation causes know harm to the environment.

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    1. You're absolutely correct, conservation does not harm the environment and should definitely be implemented in Santa Barbara. However, the water scarcity issue in Santa Barbara cannot be fixed with just conservation at this point in time. Conservation practices should have been implemented in the city many years ago. Now, the city Public Works Department has stated that in the 7th year of a drought (we are currently in the 3rd year) there will be no more groundwater. Without groundwater and without a desalination plant, the city will essentially be importing all their water. This isn't a realistic option fiscally and it is also not great for the environment.
      Seattle residents are quite bad at water conservation as well. I would guess that without a constant impending drought, some of the residents see less reason to conserve water. Seattle receives its water from two local watersheds that consist of rain and snow-melt.

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  4. Does the brine need to be dumped back into the ocean? I'm sure we could reuse all those chemicals, I'm sure chlorine demand would increase with more fresh water for pools!

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    1. Theoretically the brine does not need to be dumped into the ocean. This is simply the practice of many desalination plants. However, there are some technologies that allow the desalination plants to have zero waste. These systems all have a similar process in which the brine is made usable for sales to chemical companies. However, this costs far more money and energy. Unfortunately, it appears that the environment will be hurt either way. Though in my opinion we should use the brine instead of just dumping it. I found a report on the zero-waste desalination process if you would like to read it, though it is quite dense: http://www.usbr.gov/research/AWT/reportpdfs/report089.pdf

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